U is the nucleotide abbreviation of uracil
because u needa go to school
Here's a sample nucleotide sequence:AATUGCIf there was a nucleotide deletion (let's say the "G" gets deleted), the sequence would become:AATUCIf there was a nucleotide addition/insertion (let's say a "G" was added between "T' and "U"), the sequence would become:AATGUGCThe difference is that a deletion makes the DNA shorter and an insertion makes it longer.
A unique mono-nucleotide of RNA is uracil (U), which pairs with adenine (A) in RNA molecules. Uracil is not found in DNA, where thymine (T) replaces it in base-pairing with adenine.
Nucleotide
A adenine (A) nucleotide will bind to thymine (T) nucleotide in parental DNA through hydrogen bonding.
In RNA, the base T is replaced with the nucleotide U (uracil).
because u needa go to school
Here's a sample nucleotide sequence:AATUGCIf there was a nucleotide deletion (let's say the "G" gets deleted), the sequence would become:AATUCIf there was a nucleotide addition/insertion (let's say a "G" was added between "T' and "U"), the sequence would become:AATGUGCThe difference is that a deletion makes the DNA shorter and an insertion makes it longer.
A unique mono-nucleotide of RNA is uracil (U), which pairs with adenine (A) in RNA molecules. Uracil is not found in DNA, where thymine (T) replaces it in base-pairing with adenine.
The 4 bases that a RNA nucleotide have are adenine, guanine, uracil and cytosine.
Three
Nucleotide
A adenine (A) nucleotide will bind to thymine (T) nucleotide in parental DNA through hydrogen bonding.
You just need to switch G with C and T with A. Thymine and Adenine are always bonded together. Guanine and Cytosine are always bonded together. They would be switch so the nucleotide sequence would be. C-G-A-T-T-A-G-G-C
Nucleotide is the monomer. Nucleotide is the monomer of Nucleic Acids.
U stands for Uracil n this base is present in the RNA.But DNA contains thymin instead of Uracil.
The sugar in a DNA nucleotide contains one less oxygen atom.